Pixar Rolls Out Free Online Storytelling Course

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Disney/Pixar

Pixar has been breaking technical barriers since it was founded in 1986. But talk to any of their top filmmakers and they’ll tell you that a focus on story and characters has been the true key to the studio’s success. Now, storytellers looking to improve their craft have a chance to learn from the masters. As TechCrunch reports, Pixar has teamed up with the online education service Khan Academy to release a six-part free course titled “The Art of Storytelling.”

The course marks the third season of Khan Academy’s “Pixar in a Box” series, following previous lessons on subjects like color science, virtual cameras, and character modeling. In this class, remote students will receive lessons from some of the brightest minds to work for Pixar. They include Brave (2012) screenwriter and director Mark Andrews; Up (2009), Inside Out (2015), and Monsters, Inc. (2001) director Pete Docter; and “Sanjay’s Super Team” director and Ratatouille (2007) animator Sanjay Patel.

The first lesson provides an introduction to storytelling complete with videos and activities to coach you through each section. Lessons on character building, storyboarding, emotional appeal, and more will roll out on Khan Academy throughout the year. You can watch a teaser for the course below.

[h/t TechCrunch]


February 17, 2017 – 11:30am

Dubai May Soon Be Home to the World’s First ‘Rotating Skyscraper’

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iStock

Residents of a new skyscraper in Dubai will be able to fall asleep in front of one view and wake up facing another. That’s because, when completed, the structure will be the first to include rotating floors capable of moving independently from one another.

According to Travel + Leisure, David Fischer of the Dynamic Group is the architect with the ambitious vision to build the world’s first rotating skyscraper. Each unit is to be built separately, which would also make the building the first prefabricated skyscraper on Earth. Once constructed, the apartments will be attached to a central, stationary hub with wind turbines between each floor that generate electricity. Using voice commands, residents will be able to tell the unit to start, stop, adjust its rotation speed, and move to follow the sun or shade. The price of each living space is estimated to come out to $30 million.

The project has been met with numerous setbacks since it was proposed in 2008, but Fischer recently shared that it’s back on with completion set for 2020. The rotating skyscraper would join Dubai’s lineup of remarkable architecture, which includes the first 3D-printed office building and the world’s tallest skyscraper.

[h/t Travel + Leisure]


February 17, 2017 – 9:00am

McDonald’s Engineers a New Type of Straw for Slurping Shamrock Shakes

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The Shamrock Shake has been a seasonal McDonald’s specialty for decades, but even the classics can benefit from a high-tech update. This year, the fast food chain is launching a new version of the treat that layers the traditional mint flavor on top of chocolate. And in promotion of the new product, McDonald’s is also releasing a reinvented straw.

As Co.Design reports, the STRAW (Suction Tube for Reverse Axial Withdrawal) was designed by real engineers at the aerospace and robotics engineering firms JACE and NK Labs. What sets the device apart from conventional straws is the sharp bend in its shape and the three, eye-shaped holes in addition to the opening at the bottom end. The extra holes are positioned in a way that allows drinkers to take a sip that’s equal parts top mint layer and bottom chocolate layer. As the video below illustrates, it’s “a spectacularly unnecessary product.”

A total of 2000 STRAWs, complete with fancy, black carrying cases, will be given out for free at McDonald’s in 80 cities. You have the next few weeks to snatch up yours if you don’t want to be stuck sipping milkshakes the old-fashioned way.

[h/t Co.Design]


February 16, 2017 – 12:45pm

NASA Announces Winners of the ‘Space Poop Challenge’

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NASA/Getty

Last year, NASA asked the public for help solving a problem facing its astronauts: how to collect and store poop in space. Now NPR reports that the five winners of the “Space Poop Challenge” have been announced, and their ideas are out of this world.

Astronauts currently rely on adult diapers when they need to do their business inside their space suits. As NASA wrote back in October: “After all: when you gotta go, you gotta go. And sometimes you gotta go in a total vacuum.”

Looking for a more high-tech way to deal with these sticky circumstances, the space agency called on members of the public to submit designs for a system capable of collecting urine, feces, and menstrual fluid and routing it away from the body for 144 hours straight.

Close to 20,000 contestants submitted over 5000 ideas through the crowdsourcing site HeroX, and on Wednesday, February 15 five winners were revealed. Flight surgeon and family practice physician Thatcher Cardon was awarded the $15,000 grand prize for his ingenious waste-disposing suit hatch. Inspired by completing complex procedures in tight places as a surgeon, he designed a small airlock in the crotch for passing underwear, inflatable bedpans, and diapers in and out of the space suit.

The second-place team is made up of a physician, a dentist, and an engineering professor who all live in Houston, Texas and studied chemical engineering in college. Their “Air-PUSH Urinary Girdle” uses air to guide waste away from the body and stores it in a different part of the suit. The group, competing under the name Space Poop Unification of Doctors (or SPUDs), won $10,000 for the idea.

The third-place $5000 prize went to UK-based product designer Hugo Shelley for his “Zero Gravity Underwear.” According to NPR, he says that the skin-tight undergarment “features a new catheter designed for extended use in microgravity, combined with a mechanism that compresses, seals, and sanitizes solid waste.”

In perfect scenarios, astronauts would never spend anywhere near 144 hours in their suits and wouldn’t need to worry about the question of long-term waste collection. The designs are more for disaster situations when crew members might find themselves stuck in their space suits for up to six days at a time. After building prototypes of the winning ideas, NASA next hopes to test the systems on the International Space Station.

[h/t NPR]


February 16, 2017 – 12:30pm

Moviegoers Can Catch Free Screenings of ‘Hidden Figures’ This Weekend

filed under: Movies
Image credit: 

21st Century Fox/Fandango

Since premiering at the end of last year, Hidden Figures has made a major impact on Hollywood. The movie earned three Oscar nominations, including a nod for Best Picture. And after surpassing La La Land at the box office on February 6, it became the high-grossing Best Picture nominee of the year.

If you’ve yet to see the film despite all the buzz it has received, AMC Theaters and 21st Century Fox are teaming up to offer you an opportunity to see it for free: On Saturday, February 18, moviegoers in select markets across the country will be treated to complimentary screenings of Hidden Figures, Entertainment Weekly reports.

The movie, which tells the story of three black, female NASA mathematicians who helped to send John Glenn into space in 1962, will be shown for free in celebration of Black History Month. The film stars Taraji P. Henson as Katherine Johnson, Janelle Monáe as Mary Jackson, and Octavia Spencer as Dorothy Vaughan. Spencer received a Best Supporting Actress nomination for her performance.

The limited promotion is coming to theaters in 14 cities, including Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C. Groups and individuals can reserve tickets on a first-come, first-served basis at AMC’s website. If you don’t see a location near you on the list below, you can request additional screenings for your school, community group, or nonprofit organization here.

  • AMC Southbay Galleria 16, Rodondo Beach, CA (LA)
  • AMC Aventura 24, Aventura, FL (Miami)
  • AMC Southlake Pavilion 24 (Atlanta)
  • AMC Ford City 14 (Chicago)
  • AMC Westbank Palace 16 (New Orleans)
  • AMC White Marsh 16 (Baltimore)
  • AMC MJ Capital Center 12 (D.C.)
  • AMC Southfield 20 (Detroit)
  • AMC Esquire 7 (St. Louis)
  • AMC Cherry Hill 24 (Philadelphia market)
  • AMC Bay Plaza 13 (NYC)
  • AMC Mesquite 20 (Dallas-Ft. Worth)
  • AMC Bay Street 16 (Oakland)
  • AMC Carolina Pavilion 22 (Charlotte)

[h/t Entertainment Weekly]


February 15, 2017 – 11:45am

The Playful Surrealism of Matt Elson’s Infinity Boxes

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“Radiance.” Image credit: Matt Elson

An Infinity Box built by Los Angeles-based artist Matt Elson isn’t complete until people duck inside. Once they cross the threshold, the interior transforms into an immersive kaleidoscope flecked with candles, colored lights, and paper flowers. Whether the viewers laugh at their own reflections or gawk in wonder, the walls respond with endless variations of their shifting expressions—and if one person decides to stay inside while his or her viewing partner leaves, another spectator will pop in and transform the exhibition into something totally new.

Sticking your head into a cramped, dimly-lit box probably seems like it would be an isolating experience, but Elson, 59, insists his work is all about fostering human connection. Most pieces are built to fit two to four people’s heads at a time, and once they pop their heads inside, they embark on a shared journey through the artist’s psychedelic landscapes. “It’s really about being present with another person,” Elson tells mental_floss. “And it’s about being in the moment right here, right now, not distracted with anything else.”

The Delta of Venus

Menage a Trois

Elson has come a long way since his first try at an Infinity Box, which he built as an art student at the Pratt Institute. The foamcore sculpture had eye-holes for viewing two fields of mirrors at once. It was designed in such a way that it was impossible for the viewer’s eyes to rest on a single focal point. “There were several different experiments going on at the same time,” Elson says. “[It caused] massive confusion for the brain with a sort of seasick feeling afterward.”

After he graduated from Pratt in 1982, Elson transitioned from physical art to computer graphics, receiving a Masters of Computer Applications at the New York Institute of Technology in 1987. Three years later, when he relocated to Los Angeles for his career, he left the experimental box from his art school days behind.

Elson spent the next two decades working for some of the entertainment industry’s biggest companies. He was at DreamWorks during the studio’s launch and assisted in Disney’s transition from 2D to 3D animation. But even after all his successes, the artist felt out of his element in front of a monitor. “I was tired of making things in small dark rooms by myself,” he says. So he went back to making fine art paintings like he’d learned to do as an undergraduate student.

And then a trip to Burning Man made him reconsider mirrors as a medium.

Infinity Box No. 1

Every year, tens of thousands of people participating in Burning Man build a temporary community in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert and hold a week-long festival of art, electronic music, and “radical self-expression,” all leading up to the symbolic burning of a towering, wooden effigy of their namesake mascot. Elson attended in 2010, and while wandering through the desert displays, he came across a piece created by artist Manu Kaleido. KaleidoAct used moving lights, shadows, and puppetry reflected in a large mirrored space to alter the viewer’s sense of reality.

Inspired, Elson went home and started playing with the materials on a much smaller scale. One of the first things he did was hold two mirrors back-to-back and bring them up to his face. “That bifurcates the field of view,” he explains. “You get all this anomalous information that’s in conflict and your brain’s trying to make sense of it.”

Using that concept as a starting point, Elson began construction on a full-sized box in April of 2012. Unlike creating something in a computer program, putting a box together required a true physical connection to his work. His decades of tech experience did come in handy, however. Since building his first box as a student, he’d learned geometry concepts from animating computer graphics that made planning out 3D structures a lot easier. He used that knowledge to design pieces that were as coherent and seamless in their final forms as they were when he envisioned them.

He was so eager to show off the first box in the Infinity Box series—appropriately titled Infinity Box No. 1—that he put together a quick version made from plywood and Gatorfoam within a month to display at a Thai massage parlor in Santa Monica. He finished an updated model of Infinity Box No. 1 made from wood and masonite a year later.

Elson has built 14 boxes in the years since, and that’s not including the replicas of his original designs. They’ve been showcased at Burning Man, the Science Museum in London, and most recently at the Hall of Magic in Brooklyn during an exhibit promoting the Syfy series The Magicians. According to Elson, more than 220,000 people have experienced his creations at his shows alone, and he has noticed similar patterns from the people who view them.

“What I really love is when I see people … put their heads in a box and they’re there for 10 or 15 minutes just having a conversation,” Elson says. “The average length of time a person spends in front of a painting or a sculpture in a museum is on the border of a few seconds. They’re very short experiences, [but] people tend to really take their time with these [boxes].”

Different boxes evoke different themes. His sixth box, Radiance, is based on the story from the Bhagavad Gita, the Hindu scripture in which Krishna reveals his universal form to Arjuna. “Arjuna saw the Universal Form of the Lord with many mouths and eyes, and many visions of marvel, with numerous divine ornaments, and holding divine weapons,” the passage reads. “Arjuna saw the entire universe, divided in many ways, but standing as (all in) One (and One in all) in the body of Krishna.”

The spirit of this story is what Elson aimed to capture in the box, which is a consistent crowd-pleaser. Viewers are treated to one of two perspectives, depending on which side they enter: One side, representing order, is covered with flowers and electric candles; the other side, representing chaos, is shot through with swirling rainbow lights. The mirrors are positioned in a way that slices the occupant’s face into 11 separate reflections.

“It takes a beautiful picture, and I think that’s one of the things people like about it,” Elson says. “But for me, it’s a deeper metaphorical layer of looking at the person and seeing the many aspects of them.”

Radiance—the “chaos” side.

Radiance—the “order” side.

Matt Elson in his sixth box, Radiance.

After working on his Infinity Boxes for five years, Elson is now planning to turn them into something even more engrossing. For his next project, he’s fully embracing the carnival funhouse concept and building pieces out of full-sized shipping containers. Participants will be able to walk inside the boxes and see reflections of their whole bodies scattered across the walls.

By completely enveloping the senses, Elson hopes the boxes will compel viewers to slow down and live in the present. “That’s the real goal,” he says. “Creating a space for people to be aware of their lives.”

Gryphon’s Lair

Delta of Venus

The Unforeseen Consequence of Circumstance

Besos del Corazon
All images courtesy of Matt Elson.


February 15, 2017 – 10:30am

Pavilion Made From Recycled Shipping Pallets Was Built to Resemble Ruins

A few years ago, the architecture firm M:OFA Studios found a way to transform discarded shipping pallets into something beautiful. “Pensieve,” named after the magical memory basin from the Harry Potter series, featured more than 1200 wooden recyclables arranged to create a one-of-a-kind public space in New Delhi.

The 800-square-foot structure was erected as part of the India Design ID event in 2014 and taken down that same year. But according to inhabitat, the design was so memorable that it’s still being recognized for awards even though it’s no longer standing. Most recently, it was nominated for a 2016 Kohler Bold Design Award in the “Community Harmony” category.

The symmetrical pavilion was modeled after the ruins scattered throughout the city. The crates were stacked on top of one another—some were kept empty and others were filled with compost for growing grass and other plant life. According to M:OFA, the design was “based on the idea of unobstructed thoughts associated often with children.” The broken walls of New Dehli’s ruins are sometimes used as playgrounds by kids, and “Pensieve” was meant to evoke this same sense of playfulness. Once inside, visitors could lounge on the solar-powered furniture that lit up when occupied, or stroll among the 100 motion-activated fiber-optic light fixtures at night.

M:OFA will be bringing more of their innovative architecture to this year’s India Design ID. For their 2017 project, they’re creating “mega-structures” out of wood scraps that will resemble hills rising up from the earth.

[h/t inhabitat]


February 15, 2017 – 9:00am

Starbucks is Bringing Ice Cream to More Than 100 Locations in the U.S.

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Soon, customers at select Starbucks locations will be able to order scoops of ice cream to cool down their coffees. As Business Insider reports, the chain will be featuring new affogato offerings at more than 100 stores across the country, beginning this week.

The word affogato means “drowned” in Italian. To make one of these concoctions, baristas pour a shot of espresso into a cup of vanilla ice cream. The dessert is a popular treat in Italy, and soon Starbucks customers in Los Angeles, Orange County, Boston, and Washington, D.C. will get to try the delicacy for themselves.

The Roastery Affogato menu will be unveiled at 10 of Starbucks’s fancier Reserve bar locations. Their classic affogatos will sell for $6, and Cold Brew Malts, made with vanilla ice cream, cold brew, and chocolate bitters, will cost $8.50 each.

A less expensive version of the menu will also be made available at 100 classic Starbucks stores in Orange County, California. There, the Cold Brew Malt will feature Starbucks’ Narino 70 cold brew instead of the pricier small-lot brew, and will cost $6.40.

Starbuck first experimented with ice cream-inspired offerings last summer. Their Affogato-style Frappuccino, with hot espresso poured over the iced drink, channeled the hot-cold temperature contrast of the original dessert. The newest offerings mark the first time actual ice cream has been sold at Starbucks across the country.

[h/t Business Insider]


February 14, 2017 – 1:05pm

The Early 2000s-Era Nokia 3310 May Be Returning to Stores

Image credit: 

Ministerio TIC Colombia via Flickr // CC BY 2.0

Before the age of the smartphone, and the age of the flip phone prior to that, the Nokia 3310 reigned supreme. Now, VentureBeat reports that the classic device will be making a comeback later this month, according to a source familiar with the manufacturer’s plans.

When Nokia unveiled the 3310 model in 2000, it lacked many of the characteristics we’ve come to associate with mobile phones. Users couldn’t use the device to take pictures, send emails, or surf the web. It did, however, include several features that were notable for the time. In addition to making and receiving calls, owners could do math on the calculator, time themselves with the stopwatch, send text messages, or play Snake for hours on the phone’s monochrome screen. The 3310 was also valued for its long battery life and durable form—two qualities that might appeal to mobile users used to carrying around chargers and swiping their fingers across cracked screens.

The 2017 version of the 3310 won’t be a truly faithful replica of the first device. According to the report, Nokia is releasing a “modern version” that will pay homage to the original, but any new features likely won’t be too extravagant, as the updated 3310 will retail for just $63.

HMD Global Oy, the Finnish manufacturer who owns the rights to the Nokia brand, has yet to confirm the content of the leak. But the phone is expected to make its official debut at this year’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on February 26.

[h/t VentureBeat]


February 14, 2017 – 11:45am

Photographer Creates Detailed Exoplanets Out of Styrofoam

Image credit: 
iStock

You may remember recreating the planets from Styrofoam spheres in your elementary school science class, but Adam Makarenko takes that concept to the next level by branching outside our solar system to create hyper-realistic exoplanet models.

According to Vocativ, the Toronto-based photographer uses Styrofoam or plaster to craft each miniature world by hand. His exoplanet series evolved from an earlier project in which he built models of deep-space probes. He started building planets to hang in the backgrounds of those pictures, and soon enough his celestial creations became the focus of the work.

Because Makarenko is drawing inspiration from planets at least a few light years from our own, he takes a few artistic liberties with the landscapes he recreates. That being said, he does make an effort to incorporate the available information, Vocativ reports.

After constructing an exoplanet in stunning detail, his final step is taking a photograph that envisions the body in space. His images, showcased on Instagram, include details like rings, moons, stars, and volcanic eruptions on the surfaces of his planets. Makarenko plans to release a book highlighting some of his most impressive pieces in the future. He also hopes to build models of 1000 exoplanets—and with the number of known exoplanets growing each year, he won’t have worry about running out of material if he wishes to keep going.

[h/t Vocativ]

Header/banner images: iStock.


February 14, 2017 – 9:00am